Next Article in Journal
The Dynamic Behavior of Silos with Grain-like Material during Earthquakes
Next Article in Special Issue
Interdisciplinary Teaching Reform of Financial Engineering Majors Based on the Analytic Hierarchy Process in the Post-Pandemic Era
Previous Article in Journal
Towards Automated Situational Awareness Reporting for Disaster Management—A Case Study
Previous Article in Special Issue
Stakeholders’ Perceptions of the Vocational Competences Acquired by Students Enrolled in Accounting Master’s Programmes in Romania
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Exploring Students’ Opinion towards Integration of Learning Games in Higher Education Subjects and Improved Soft Skills—A Comparative Study in Poland and Romania

by
Cosmina-Simona Toader
1,
Ioan Brad
1,
Ciprian Ioan Rujescu
1,*,
Carmen-Simona Dumitrescu
1,
Elena Claudia Sîrbulescu
2,
Manuela Dora Orboi
2,
Raul Pașcalău
3,
Małgorzata Zajdel
4,
Małgorzata Michalcewicz-Kaniowska
4 and
Codruța Gavrilă
5
1
Department of Management and Rural Development, Faculty of Management and Rural Tourism, University of Life Sciences “King Mihai I” from Timișoara, Calea Aradului No. 119, 300645 Timisoara, Romania
2
Department of Economics and Financing of the Company, Faculty of Management and Rural Tourism, University of Life Sciences “King Mihai I” from Timișoara, Calea Aradului No. 119, 300645 Timisoara, Romania
3
Faculty of Agriculture, University of Life Sciences “King Mihai I” from Timișoara, Calea Aradului No. 119, 300645 Timisoara, Romania
4
Department of Economics and Marketing, Faculty of Management, Bydgoszcz University of Science and Technology, Fordońska 430 Street, 85-790 Bydgoszcz, Poland
5
Department of Teacher Training, University of Life Sciences “King Mihai I” from Timișoara, Calea Aradului No. 119, 300645 Timisoara, Romania
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2023, 15(10), 7969; https://doi.org/10.3390/su15107969
Submission received: 3 March 2023 / Revised: 4 May 2023 / Accepted: 11 May 2023 / Published: 13 May 2023

Abstract

:
This study aimed to explore and compare Polish and Romanian students’ opinions towards the integration of learning games in Higher Education subjects and to highlight the improved soft skills by participating in learning games. This article reports the results of a quantitative study that was designed to explore and compare the opinions of 103 students from 2 universities towards the integration of learning games in the Project Management subject. The students ranked 71 items found in the questionnaire in 7 scale questions. The items are presented in the form of skills that can be developed by participating in educational games and aspects that are important in Project Management. In the analysis of the data, the T test—two sample test—was used, and the nonparametric Wilcoxon rank-sum test, using the SAS Studio application to assess whether the average responses are different between the two groups (α = 0.05). There were significant differences in the case of some items related to the skills that can be developed by participating in two educational games (communication, empathy, awareness, problem-solving, work productivity, and time management), but also items that help students understand the importance of some aspects related to Project Management after participation in educational games (work productivity, team dimension, time management, and following request).

1. Introduction

Whether we talk about the first industrial revolution—Industry 1.0, when the transition was made from manual labor to the use of machines driven by the force of steam or water; the second industrial revolution—Industry 2.0, which took place at the end of the 19th century and culminated with the emerge of electricity; the third industrial revolution—Industry 3.0, which began in the second half of the 20th century; and intertwines with the fourth industrial revolution—Industry 4.0 when with the advent of the Internet, appears digitization, artificial intelligence, 3D printing, augmented virtual reality, the internet of all things; or it is about the first stages of Industry 5.0 are highlighted—when people, organizations, and things are connected through a digital network and the internet of brains appears; it is obvious that education and industry are essential components of any country’s economy, and these components are interconnected [1].
Taking into account the recorded trends, when talking about the future of education, we talk about digital education, the digitalization of education, the transformation of the educational process, about education with virtual teachers, about learning for sustainable development [2].
Technological developments, scientific research, and the digital revolution are causing major changes in today’s job profiles. In this context, it is necessary to develop new skills and competencies in order to access the labor market. Future job offers will be both human and digital, strictly related to the trends that are changing the world today. All participants in the labor market will have to show flexibility to the changes recorded, and employees will have to upskill in order to acquire the new skills needed to take up new jobs. According to Paul A., 2022, the needs that will be found in the future in the labor market are the need to reduce the time spent at work, the need to make working hours more flexible, the need to increase the level of satisfaction at work, the need to reduce costs, the need to produce faster, the need to produce more easily, the need to make products easier to use, the need to improve the safety and reliability of products and services, and the need to reduce the adverse impact on the environment [1]. Regarding the skills required of future employees, the following were identified as mental flexibility, the ability to solve complex problems, critical thinking and analysis, creativity, sociability, transdisciplinary knowledge, computational thinking, STEM knowledge—science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, SMAC knowledge—social, mobile, analytical, and cloud [1].
The development and improvement of human skills, competencies and capacities through education, learning and work overwhelmingly ensures economic success, the well-being of the population, and social cohesion [3].
According to Sir Ken Robinson, one of the current challenges is the transformation of education systems into systems suitable for the needs of the twenty-first century, and at the heart of the transformation a different approach to human intelligence and creativity must be found. Education performs a decisive role in the development of knowledge, skills, and attitudes essential for economic growth and vitality [4].
A considerable part of the problems in all sectors of the labor market are due to education systems. Employers often complain that the education system does not generate the employees they need, namely, people able to adapt, to think, to be creative, confident in their own forces, communicative, and to work in a team [5].
The shift towards sustainable development of the labor market is defined by the expansion towards new technologies, new sectors and markets, interconnected economic systems, and information that are spreading rapidly and have a wide coverage of economic areas. The last decade of technological advancement has led to a major change in jobs, an acute shortage of skills needed in many areas, and a competitive claim to the unique nature of human intelligence, now caused by artificial intelligence. The challenges of the next decade are related to leading towards a sustainable development of the labor market that values human potential and creates large-scale prosperity [3].
Skills that can be associated with achieving sustainable development are: looking at global problems from the perspective of people from around the world, understanding how to create change, understanding how human activity is affecting nature, considering ethical issues linked to a subject, the causes of inequality in the world, challenging the way we do things now (such as business, politics, and education), solving problems by thinking about whole systems—including different connections and interactions, communicating complex information clearly and effectively to different types of people, using resources efficiently to limit the impact on the environment and other people, looking at a problem using information from different subjects or disciplines, and planning for the long term, and the short term [6].
According to the results of a study conducted in the United Kingdom in 2021, attended by more than 8500 students studying in higher education, 79% of respondents believe that universities should be required to develop social and environmental skills through the courses they offer to students. Regarding the ways the respondents agreed on for the development of social and environmental skills within the courses, these are offering placements or work experience (83%), linking coursework or dissertations to the issues (79%), building the material into the existing content in the course (75%), run extra-curricular activities within the students’ union, offer a specific module on the course, and run extra-curricular activities within departments. According to the same study, students appreciate that the skills acquired through attending courses, which prove to be important when engaging, are the ability to communicate complex information clearly and effectively to different types of people (89%) and long-term and short-term planning (88%) [6].
Looking to the future, and taking into account the needs of the labor market and the skills required by employers, educational systems must develop/transform/reinvent in order to endow students/graduates with skills for sustainable development (problem-solving, teamwork, leadership, communication in written and oral form, career management, creativity, cognitive flexibility, and emotional and social intelligence) [5].
The purpose of the present article is to explore and compare Polish and Romanian students’ opinions towards the integration of learning games in Higher Education subjects and to highlight the improved soft skills by participating in learning games. The main research questions designed in the present study are: (1) How do students rank the integration of learning games in the Project Management discipline? (2) What are the skills developed by students in the Project Management discipline after participating in learning games? and (3) Are there significant differences between the opinions of Polish students and Romanian students regarding the integration of learning games in the Project Management discipline?
The article contains seven main sections. The first section is assigned to introduction.
The second section is dedicated to a literature review where we give an overview of aspects related to play, games learning, educational games, and main findings of relevant studies regarding the integration of didactic games in various forms in educational activities. The third section, Research design, includes information about the research instrument, participants in the study, curriculum of Project Management subject and integration of educational games, data collections, and data analysis. The fourth section presents the results of the study and it is followed by the fifth section, Discussions. The article ends with the limitations and implications of the study, conclusions, and future research perspectives in the direction of the integration of educational games in didactic activities in higher education.

2. Literature Review

This section covers the concepts of play, game and learning, educational games, and the benefits of educational games.

2.1. Play, Game, and Learning

This section considers the fundamental actions of human beings that are taken at certain stages of the age of growth, play, and game have a high formative potential. This is valid for the self-determined, spontaneous game, or the competent, structured, and guided game, which can take the form of the didactic game applied in the educational environment [7].
In the literature, the game is a specific action with meanings and tensions carried out according to accepted rules outside the sphere of material necessity and accompanied by feelings of cheerfulness, relaxation, and tension [8]. Additionally, the game is regarded as a primary manifestation of the creative attitude towards what surrounds us, activating imagination and thinking [9], but also as work, good, duty, and the ideal of life [10].
The size of the game is a complex one and can be approached from an artistic, historical, and psychological point of view, and the realization of a complete taxonomy of the games is an open issue. Figure 1 synthetically presented the typology of games through the prism of the didactics of games.
Practical and pedagogical approaches show that a game experience can take shape in the form of a learning exercise in which participants can be positioned in various playful contexts with a formative character [11].
Regarded as a process, learning involves the permanent elaboration and re-elaboration of cognitive structures and operators that ensure progress in the sphere of human knowledge through a sustained intellectual effort. The game is pure learning; in this sense, it can be used as a teaching tool but also as a motivational tool since it stimulates emotions of joy and well-being, thus amplifying learning through genetic expression and neuronal growth in the brain [12].

2.2. Educational Games

The concept of a didactic game takes on multiple variants, depending on the formative, informative goals, and the intendedness associated with them. From a psychological point of view, didactic game contributes to the development of cognitive processes, the development of affective processes, the development of motricity, and motivation of the participants. Due to its accessibility, the didactic game is one of the methods that develop engaging and motivating activities and can be easily integrated because it imprints an interactive character to educational activities [11].
Considered a method of learning through practical action but also an active method of training, the didactic game offers integrated educational experiences through which formative tasks of the educational process are achieved [13]. Figure 2 presents the formative tasks of the educational process achieved by integrating games into teaching activities, as identified by Pânișoară, 2022 [13].
The didactic game is chosen, most of the time, to achieve the objectives of the activity [14] and is less used in acquiring new knowledge [15]. Whitton și Moseley believes that there are five types of challenges in the structure of the game: knowledge and recall, puzzles, problems that require creativity, concrete tasks, and social challenges [16].
The development of the didactic game involves going through some moments in order to stimulate the learner on the intellectual, actional, and attitudinal level:
  • Introduction into the game through preparatory discussions, capturing attention, and presenting the material;
  • Announcing the title of the game and the objectives targeted;
  • Explaining and demonstrating the rules of the game;
  • Fixing the rules by performing the trial game;
  • Execution of the game by the participants;
  • Complicating the game through new variants;
  • The end of the game through general conclusions and assessments [13].
Educational games aim to create similar mechanisms for various purposes. Through educational games, learning processes are facilitated, for example, by maintaining motivation, effort, and increasing the degree of involvement during the game [17].
Dieleman and Huising apud Pânişoara G. state that through the game, all four learning styles of D. Kolb can be successfully used, centered on concrete experience, reflective observation, conceptualization, and active testing [18].

2.3. Benefits of Educational Games

Numerous studies highlight the positive effects that learning through play has (concentration, joy, and enthusiasm for learning), but also that elements of play can also cause negative emotions, such as frustration when mistakes are made. However, even negative emotions can make a game a pleasant and challenging experience [19,20,21,22,23,24].
The main purpose of educational games is to educate or inform. Educational games are designed to combine the concentration required by challenging activities, and the pleasure experienced through the full use of skills [25]. Catalano and Albulescu state that the capitalization of the game within educational programs as a formative approach is often hampered by a series of curricular constraints and the educational system and advocates for the transfer in different weights of the attributes of the game in as many of the forms of expression of the educational process as possible (teaching–learning and evaluation activities, educational relations, the organization of the educational environment, and the valorization of material and space resources) [7].
Numerous articles have been developed on the basis of studies that have focused on the elaboration and development of didactic games, implications, and effects generated by the use of didactic games in different forms in educational activities, in different countries, at different educational levels [26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34].
A relatively small number of articles were published on the basis of research whose purpose was to find out the opinion, perception, interest, and attitude of students and teachers toward the integration of games in various forms in teaching activities [35,36,37,38,39,40].
The benefits of educational games integrated into teaching activities are recognized by both teachers and students [41,42,43,44]. Most of the teachers who are using games in their classes observed student engagement in games and cognitive learning outcomes as effects of game integration in formal teaching settings [41]. Combining gamification with traditional learning methods can be enhanced learning outcomes of students. In addition to this, student learning is influenced by the content of the game, instructions, and the motivation for participation [45]. The challenge of the game can be an important factor for engagement but also for learning through play [25]. Competition, as an important mechanism in the game, has a positive impact on students’ learning effect and learning motivation [46]. Integrated in various forms in educational activities, didactic games can facilitate the teaching and learning process [25,44,47,48]. By participating in game jams, students activated at participants’ skills, such as creativity and critical thinking, and also are developed skills, such as communication and team collaboration skills [47]. Implementation of the serious games determined a strengthening of the students’ sustainable curriculum through the development of related skills. The improvement of skills, such as strategic thinking, collaborative thinking, and self-awareness, in addition to encouraging systemic, critical, and problem-solving thinking, assure success in education for sustainable development [44]. Video games can be an effective means of challenging learning, being perceived by students as interesting and enjoyable and resulting in engagement and immersion in the game-based learning task [25].
Most of the studies focused on evaluating educational outcomes and how the development of certain skills and competencies is influenced [49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56]. In the studies undertaken, the research methodology is diverse, uses qualitative and quantitative methods, and the collection of information is mainly done through questionnaires and interviews [42,56,57,58,59].
Studies show that the integration of games into educational activities can influence the social opportunities and problem-solving skills of students. Additionally, educational games improve students’ conceptual understanding of different subjects, involve them in funny activities, and enhance their motivation to learn and even their performance [44,60,61,62,63].

3. Research Design

Starting from numerous studies that aim at the use of games in various forms in the field of education and at different educational levels, the presented study focuses on students’ opinion on the integration of games in the discipline of Project Management and the effects they can generate in the learning process (increasing motivation/interest to participate to didactical activities, increasing self-trust, discovering new abilities, increasing creation and innovative capacity, improving communication skills, and solution orientation). In order to attain the purpose of the article, the following steps have been made: establishing the appropriate research methods and tools, literature review, questionnaire design, questionnaire pre-testing, questionnaire application, data analysis, and conclusions drawing. The methodological steps can be seen in Figure 3.

3.1. Research Instrument

In the presented study, students’ opinion on the integration of didactic games in the didactic activity was found by participating in a structured quantitative survey. The survey was developed in order to obtain the students’ opinions on the integration of didactic games in the discipline project management (how they appreciate the integration of games in the didactic activity, what are the aspects they consider important after participating in the games, and what are the skills developed). The survey was conducted by applying an online questionnaire developed in Google Forms [64].
The questionnaire has 2 sections with 10 questions, 3 of them are single-choice question, and the other 7 are using evaluation scales. Those single-choice questions are related, to gender, age and country. Using an evaluation scale from 1 to 5, the students appreciated a number of aspects regarding the skills acquired through participation in didactic games, the integration of games in the activities carried out in the discipline Project Management, the effects of integrating games in the process of active learning (Figure 4). Rating note: 1 means not at all, 2 means small measure, 3 means appropriate, 4 means largely and, 5 means very much. Before being applied, the questionnaire was pre-tested on 10 students in order to clarify and discover confusing instructions related to going through the questionnaire in terms of time and formulation of questions. Following the pre-testing, some of the questions in the questionnaire were simplified.

3.2. Participants

The participants in the study answered the questions of the same questionnaire; these were students from two faculties belonging to a university in Poland and a university in Romania (Bydgoszcz University of Science and Technology—Faculty of Management, and University of Life Sciences “King Mihai I” from Timisoara—Faculty of Management and Rural Tourism). The number of participants in the study was 103 students. The discipline of Project Management was chosen because it was considered to be a discipline to which the integration of didactic games is suitable in order to set the theoretical notions taught in the course [42,65]. The 103 students who participated in the study went through the discipline of Project Management and participated in at least two games applied in the teaching activities of the discipline (Marshmallow Challenge and 5S Game).
The students’ participation in the study was done voluntarily and anonymously.

3.3. Curriculum of Project Management Subject and Integration of Educational Games

According to the curriculum of both faculties, project management is assigned lectures, seminars, and projects. In Poland, in the discipline of Project Management, seminars hold a share of 50% of the total hours allocated to teaching activities, and in Romania, the share is 33%. In the seminar, classes are used in addition to applications, exercises, role-playing games, tests, case studies, and didactic games in order to develop the skills and competences of the students to use concepts related to project planning and education of project design, development, and management skills.
At the same time, emphasis is placed on the awareness of the importance of aspects, such as resource management, risk management, the development phases of a team, the size of the teams involved in projects, the roles of team members in projects, and implicitly the development of skills required/requested by employers. Additionally, it was aimed at boosting the classes, increasing the students’ motivation, involvement in the activities carried out in the discipline, networking, and collaboration between students, and developing creativity, innovative spirit, and team spirit.
The gaming activities with the students were conducted by teachers from Poland and Romania who are teaching Project Management. The aim was to create a similar framework; for this purpose, teachers discussed and agreed on learning games and the procedure for integrating and applying the learning games.
Therefore, in the activities carried out, games have been integrated that train students, involve them, and challenge them to experience a different approach to the discipline in order to develop skills, such as communication, responsibility, problem solving, creativity, time management, adaptability, and collaboration. Some of the games integrated in the teaching activities of the project management discipline can be found described in Table 1.

3.4. Data Collection

Completing the questionnaire was done by accessing a link or by scanning a QR code made available to students by the teachers in the discipline. The survey was conducted simultaneously in both countries, between 5 and 17 October 2022. All the information obtained was organized in a database in order to analyze the results of the survey by applying statistical tests.

3.5. Data Analysis

Following the application of the questionnaire, for each question provided in the questionnaire, two sets of data resulted, a set related to the answers given by the students from Poland and a set related to the answers given by the students from Romania.
In order to assess whether the average of the answers is different between the two analyzed groups, T test—two sample test—was applied, and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test using the SAS Studio application [66].
The null hypothesis (H0) for all the questionnaire questions assumes that the values of the answers indicated by the Romanian students do not differ from those of the answers provided by the Polish students.
The level of significance chosen is α = 0.05.

4. Results

By processing the data resulting from the application of the questionnaire with the help of the two t-tests and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test, it emerged that out of the total of 71 pairs of statistical series (items from the questionnaire) in 48 situations, both statistical tests used, led to the rejection of the null hypothesis. In this case, it was considered that the answers differ significantly between the two groups of students from Romania and Poland, respectively. In the other 23 pairs of statistical series, at least one of the tests does not indicate the rejection of the null hypothesis, thus understanding that there are not enough statistical arguments to confirm that the students in the two groups responded differently.
By participating in the Marshmallow Challenge, the two groups of students specified to what extent they had developed a range of skills. The two groups of students appreciated differently 7 items out of the total of 11 in the Q.II.1 set. The development of skills, such as communication, integrity, empathy, problem solving, adaptability, work ethic, and time management, presented a higher average of responses in students in Poland compared to those in Romania. In the case of the other four items, responsibility, active listening, awareness, and creativity, the two applied tests do not indicate simultaneously that the average values of the students’ responses in Poland are significantly different from the answers of the students in Romania.
The values of the tests t, Wilcoxon rank-sum test, respectively p are rendered in Table 2.
Similarly, the results of statistical tests for the other questions are presented.
Regarding the development of skills by participating in the 5 S Game (Q.II.2. Appreciate how you have developed the following skills by participating in 5 S Game), the two groups appreciated six different items: communication, empathy, awareness, time management, work ethic, and problem solving. Thus, the average values of the responses indicated by the students from Poland are between 4.25 and 4.44, while the students from Romania indicated answers with an average between 3.67 and 3.93. In the case of the other four items (responsibility, integrity, active listening, and adaptability) the two tests did not simultaneously indicate that the differences between the responses of the two groups of students are significant (Table 3).
To question Q.II.3., After participating in MARSHMALLOW CHALLENGE, to which extend did you realized the importance of the following aspects in Project Management?—the two groups appreciated a total of six items. For four items the opinions were different: work productivity, team dimension, time management, and following requests. For two items (organizing and managing resources, and communication) the answers are not significantly different (Table 4).
By question Q.II.4., students were asked to appreciate to what extent they realized the importance of aspects (six items) for Project Management after participating in the 5 S Game. In accordance with the answers given, for three items, there were recorded significantly different opinions between the groups of students from Poland from Romania, respectively: work productivity, team dimension, and time management. For 3 items, three organizing and managing resources, communication, and following requests, the tests do not simultaneously indicate that opinions have significant differences (Table 5).
To question Q.II.5., Appreciate how you have developed the following skills by participating in ALL learning games integrated in Project Management subject—groups of students responded to 31 items. For 24 items, both tests simultaneously showed significant differences between the two groups of students (Table 6).
Regarding the effects of integrating didactic games in the teaching activity (Q II.6.), the students appreciated four different items (increasing motivation to participate to didactical activities, increasing self-trust, discovering new abilities, and increasing creation and innovative processes). In the case of the items improving communication skills and solution orientation, the answers are not significantly different (Table 7).
Regarding the integration of games in the discipline of Project Management (Q II.7.), the answers do not show statistically significant differences in the case of the two groups of students who participated in the study (Table 8). This fact shows that, from a didactic point of view, the games are favorably appreciated by the students, and the integration of the games in the didactic activity in the discipline of Project Management is carried out in a similar manner from a qualitative point of view.
Closely analyzing the 48 different items mentioned by the two groups of students, it is noted that the average of the answers provided by the students in Poland was in all cases higher than the average of the answers offered by the students from Romania.
Additionally, by achieving an average of the response averages for the analyzed groups, it is observed that students in Poland have an average of responses of 4394, while students in Romania have an average of 3908. Even if both groups favorably appreciate the integration of educational games in the discipline project management and are aware of the acquisition and development of skills by participating in these games, the average responses show us that students in Poland have a greater openness for educational games and the skills developed through them compared to students in Romania.
The increased interest on the part of students in professional career development may also be due to participation in career counseling activities and involvement in extracurricular activities, given that in both universities, there are active career counseling and guidance centers.

5. Discussion

Chosen by teachers due to their formative valences, didactic games challenge students to perform complex instructive-educational tasks in an atmosphere of a good mood, engaging, and motivating [42,45,46]. By integrating didactic games, educational activities become more dynamic, relaxed, and even fun, the variety of activities preventing the appearance of boredom and fatigue [13].
The appreciation of the integration of educational games in teaching activities and the skills that can be acquired and developed also shows a recognition on the part of students of their importance for career development [42,44,46]. The interest of students in the development of key skills and competencies for easier integration into the labor market denotes an increased interest on the part of students for professional career development and, implicitly, good information on current trends in the labor market and the requirements of employers [67]. We mention that Project Manager is an emerging job, finding itself in the Top 20 job roles in increasing demand, occupying in 2020 the 11th position out of 20 [3]. Additionally, given the expected major changes in the labor market, some emerging jobs present significant opportunities to transition to jobs with increased demand in the future because of effective career pivots. In this context, Project Management represent a source job family for the destination job of tomorrow such as Product Development, Sales Data and AI [3].

6. Limitation and Implication

We mention that it is difficult to identify the determined factors and argue the identified situation because it was not one of the objectives established at the beginning of our study, but this could be a starting point for future studies undertaken by the authors.
Increasing the learning efficiency in the discipline of Project Management can be achieved by creating interactive learning environments by using methods, such as problematization, project-based learning, and learning through play, and the development of skills, such as critical thinking, problem solving, organizing and managing resources, creativity, time management, and leadership occurs due to the permanent transfer of ideas and opinions between students and teachers.
Schools, through their teachers, must create an environment conducive to the teaching-learning process, an environment in which students are actively involved. The active involvement of students implies that they have their own reflections, to ask questions, to formulate problematic situations, to listen and understand different points of view, to examine situations without retrials, to adopt an ethical behavior in relation to the ideas issued, to argue the positions adopted, to have a logical reasoning and complex thinking to strengthen and develop the professional and transversal skills required by the representatives’ epistemic community. In this context, educational games, applied in various forms (traditional games, serious games, video games, simulation games, etc.) can be successfully integrated.
The students who participated in the study voluntarily responded to the questions of the questionnaire, so they showed a positive attitude towards the integration of the games from the beginning.
Limitations of the study are related to the survey participants (103 students from 2 universities). Since participation in the study required that the participants fulfill two conditions (taking the Project Management course and participating in at least two games applied in the didactic activities of the course), the number of participants was reduced. Conclusion drawing is limited only to the groups analyzed. The same analysis could be conducted with a larger sample size to generalize the phenomena or could be extended over the years with different generations of students to obtain more evidence for the study.

7. Conclusions

By integrating the educational games within the teaching activities, in accordance with the topic of the Project Management discipline, a number of positive aspects have been identified at the two universities studied. In this sense, educational games can be considered an effective way to achieve the objectives and tasks provided in the curriculum for the acquisition of modes of action. Teaching games are in the form of opportunities for the formation of skills and abilities, even being a motivational factor for potentiating learning efforts, a technique for executing actions, developing opinions, beliefs, moral feelings, cultivating attitudes of respect, acceptance, fair play, and empathy.
The students showed a positive attitude when they were offered to participate in the teaching games. The manifestation of a positive attitude on the part of the students toward the integration of didactic games in the teaching activities in the discipline Project Management facilitated the teaching-learning process.
Regarding the skills developed by students through their participation and involvement in the activities carried out in the discipline of Project Management, we can mention personal introspection and management, personal integrity and trust, personal communication, networking and involvement, leadership, teamwork, conflict and crisis management, inventiveness, negotiation, and results orientation.
The skills acquired and developed by students through participation in educational games are skills required in the labor market, and this fact can give students/graduates a competitive advantage in the process of selection and recruitment, and integration into the workplace. Some skills developed through participation in integrated teaching games in the MP discipline are found in the Top 15 Skills for 2025 [3].

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, C.-S.T. and M.M.-K.; methodology, C.-S.T., C.I.R. and M.D.O.; software, C.I.R. and M.M.-K., validation, C.-S.T., I.B. and M.Z.; formal analysis, C.I.R. and C.-S.D.; investigation, I.B., E.C.S. and M.Z.; resources, C.-S.D., E.C.S. and C.G.; data curation, C.I.R., C.-S.D. and R.P.; writing—original draft preparation, C.-S.T., M.D.O. and C.G.; writing—review and editing, C.-S.T., C.I.R. and R.P. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Informed Consent Statement

Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.

Data Availability Statement

The data presented in this study are available from the authors upon request.

Acknowledgments

This research paper is supported by the project “Increasing the impact of excellence research on the capacity for innovation and technology transfer within USAMVB Timisoara” code 6PFE, submitted in the competition Program 1—Development of the national system of research—development, Subprogram 1.2—Institutional performance, Institutional development projects—Development projects of excellence in RDI.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Questionnaire design and item coding.
Table A1. Questionnaire design and item coding.
QuestionCodeQuestionCode
Q II.1. Appreciate how you have developed the following skills by participating to MARSHMALLOW CHALLENGEQ II.5. Appreciate how you have developed the following skills by participating to ALL learning games integrated in Project Management subject
Communication Q II.1.commConflict resolution Q II.5.conflict
Responsibility Q II.1.respNegotiation Q II.5.negotiation
Honesty/integrity Q II.1integrPublic speaking Q II.5.public
Active listening Q II.1.activLeadership Q II.5.leader
Empathy Q II.1.empathLearning from others Q II.5.learning
Awareness Q II.1.awarenOpen-mindedness Q II.5.open
Problem solving Q II.1.problTaking calculate risks Q II.5.risk
Creativity Q II.1.creativExperimentation Q II.5.experim
Adaptability Q II.1.adaptCreative thinking Q II.5.creative
Work ethic Q II.1.workOrganization Q II.5.organiz
Time management Q II.1.timeOptimism Q II.5.optimism
Q II.2. Appreciate how you have developed the following skills by participating to 5 S GameEnthusiasm Q II.5.enthusiasm
Communication Q II.2.commCooperation Q II.5.cooperation
Responsibility Q II.2.respGrowth mindset Q II.5.growth
Honesty/integrity Q II.2.integrProactivity Q II.5.proactivity
Active listening Q II.2.activCritical thinking Q II.5.critical
Empathy Q II.2.empathAnalysis and identification of problems Q II.5.aip
Awareness Q II.2.awarenTask management Q II.5.task
Time management Q II.2.timeEmotional intelligence Q II.5.emotional
Work ethic Q II.2.workSolution orientation Q II.5.solution
Problem solving Q II.2.problAttention to details Q II.5.attention
Adaptability Q II.2.adaptIntegrity Q II.5.integrity
Q II.3. After participating in MARSHMALLOW CHALLENGE, to which extend you realized the importance of the following aspects in Project Management?Perseverance Q II.5.perseverance
Work productivity Q II.3.workprodAchieving goals Q II.5.achieving
Organizing and managing the resources Q II.3.omrResults oriented Q II.5.results
Team dimension (number of team’s members) Q II.3.teamResponsibility Q II.5.responsibility
Communication Q II.3.commHonesty Q II.5.honesty
Time management Q II.3.timeActive listening Q II.5.active
Following the requests Q II.3.requestEmpathy Q II.5.empathy
Q II.4. After taking part 5 S Game, to which extend do you realized the importance of the following aspects in Project Management Collaboration Q II.5.collaboration
Work productivity Q II.4.workprodAwareness Q II.5.awareness
Organizing and managing the resources Q II.4.omrQ II.6. Games integration in teaching activities meant to you:
Team dimension (number of Team’s members) Q II.4.teamIncreasing motivation/interest to participate to didactical activities Q II.6.motivation
Communication Q II.4.commIncreasing self-trust Q II.6.self-trust
Time management Q II.4.timeDiscovering new abilities Q II.6.new
Following the requests Q II.4.requestIncreasing creation and innovative capacityQ II.6. creation
Q II.7. How do you appreciate games integration in Project Management discipline?Q II.7.gamesintegrImproving communication skills Q II.6.comm
Solution orientationQ II.6.solution

References

  1. Paul, A. Ghidul meseriilor viitorului, Ediția a V-a; Asociația INACO—Inițiativa pentru Competivitate. 2022. Available online: https://inaco.ro/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/GMV-5.pdf (accessed on 7 October 2022).
  2. Modrzynski, P.; Zajdel, M.; Michalcewicz-Kaniowska, M. Conditions and Potential for Remote Student Teaching. Eur. Res. Stud. J. 2020, 23, 848–866. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. World Economic Forum. The Future of Jobs Report 2020. October 2020. Available online: https://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Future_of_Jobs_2020.pdf (accessed on 10 October 2022).
  4. Zajdel, M.; Michalcewicz-Kaniowska, M.; Modrzynski, P.; Komarnicka, A.; Modrzynska, J. Conditions and Determinants of Distance Education for Students during the COVID-19 Pandemic—Evaluation in the Kuyavia-Pomerania Region in Poland. Sustainability 2021, 13, 10373. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Robinson, K. O Lume Ieșită din Minți: Revoluția Creativă a Educației; Publica: București, Romania, 2011; pp. 31–33, 94–95. [Google Scholar]
  6. Students Organising for Sustainability. Sustainability Skills Survey 2021–22. Research in to Students’ Experience of Teaching and Learning on Sustainable Development. Higher Education Report. United Kingdom. Available online: https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/6008334066c47be740656954/62de805cb0d9030a96c6e88a_20220125_SOS-UK%20Sustainability%20Skills%202021-22%20-%20HE%20only%20-%20FINAL.pdf (accessed on 15 November 2022).
  7. Catalano, H.; Albulescu, I. Didactica Jocurilor; Editura Didactică și Pedagogică: București, Romania, 2019. [Google Scholar]
  8. Huizinga, J. Homo Ludens; Editura Univers: București, Romania, 1977. [Google Scholar]
  9. Vîgoțki, L. Play and Its Role in the Mental Development of the Child. Sov. Psychol. 1967, 5, 6–18. [Google Scholar]
  10. Claparède, E. Psihologia Copilului și Pedagogía Experimentală; Editura Didactică și Pedagogică: București, Romania, 1975. [Google Scholar]
  11. Catalano, H.; Albulescu, I. Pedagogia Jocului și a Activităților Ludice; Didactica Publishing House: București, Romania, 2022. [Google Scholar]
  12. Cozolino, I. Predarea Bazată pe Atașament. Cum să Creezi o Clasă Tribală; Editura Trei: București, Romania, 2017. [Google Scholar]
  13. Pânișoară, I.O. Enciclopedia Metodelor de Învățământ; Editura Polirom: Iași, Romania, 2022. [Google Scholar]
  14. New, R.S.; Cochran, M. Early Childhood Education: An International Encyclopedia; Greenwood Publishing Group: Westport, CT, USA, 2007; Volume 4. [Google Scholar]
  15. Farber, M. Global Perspectives on Gameful and Playful Teaching and Learning; IGI Global: New York, NY, USA, 2019. [Google Scholar]
  16. Whitton, N.; Moseley, A. Using Games to Enhance Learning and Teaching: A Beginner’s Guide; Routledge: London, UK, 2012. [Google Scholar]
  17. Greipl, S.; Klein, E.; Lindstedt, A.; Kiili, K.; Moeller, K.; Karnath, H.-O.; Bahnmueller, J.; Bloechle, J.; Ninaus, M. When the brain comes into play: Neurofunctional correlates of emotions and reward in game-based learning. Comput. Hum. Behav. 2021, 125, 106946. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Pânișoară, G. Psihologia Învățării; Editura Polirom: Iași, Romania, 2019. [Google Scholar]
  19. Gee, J.P. Good Video Games + Good Learning: Collected Essays on Video Games, Learning, and Literacy, 2nd ed.; Peter Lang: New York, NY, USA, 2007. [Google Scholar]
  20. Kapoor, A.; Burleson, W.; Picard, R.W. Automatic prediction of frustration. Int. J. Hum.-Comput. Stud. 2007, 65, 724–736. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Sabourin, J.L.; Lester, J.C. Affect and engagement in game-based Learning environments. IEEE Trans. Affect. Comput. 2014, 5, 45–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Ninaus, M.; Greipl, S.; Kiili, K.; Lindstedt, A.; Huber, S.; Klein, E.; Karnath, H.-O.; Moeller, K. Increased emotional engagement in game-based learning—A machine learning approach on facial emotion detection data. Comput. Educ. 2019, 142, 103641. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Cuc, L.D.; Feher, A.; Cuc, P.N.; Szentesi, S.G.; Rad, D.; Rad, G.; Pantea, M.F.; Joldes, C.S.R. A Parallel Mediation Analysis on the Effects of Pandemic Accentuated Occupational Stress on Hospitality Industry Staff Turnover Intentions in COVID-19 Context. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 12050. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Szentesi, S.G.; Cuc, L.D.; Feher, A.; Cuc, P.N. Does COVID-19 Affect Safety and Security Perception in the Hospitality Industry? A Romanian Case Study. Sustainability 2021, 13, 11388. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Hamari, J.; Shernoff, D.J.; Rowe, E.; Coller, B.; Asbell-Clarke, J.; Edwards, T. Challenging games help students learn: An empirical study on engagement, flow and immersion in game-based learning. Comput. Hum. Behav. 2016, 54, 170–179. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Münz, U.; Schumm, P.; Allgöwer, F. Educational Games in Control. IFAC Proc. Vol. 2008, 41, 12625–12630. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Li, J.; Ma, S.; Ma, L. The Study on the Effect of Educational Games for the Development of Students’ Logic-Mathematics of Multiple Intelligence. Phys. Procedia 2012, 33, 1749–1752. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Bakan, U.; Bakan, U. Estudios sobre aprendizaje basado en juegos en revistas educativas: Una revisión sistemática de tendencias recientes. Actual. Pedagógicas 2018, 72, 119–145. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Nasiri, M.; Amirmohseni, L.; Mofidi, A.; Paim, C.P.P.; Shamloo, M.B.B.; Asadi, M. Educational games developed for students in perioperative nursing: A systematic review and appraisal of the evidence. Nurse Educ. Pract. 2019, 37, 88–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Rahimi, S.; Shute, V.; Kuba, R.; Dai, C.-P.; Yang, X.; Smith, G.; Fernández, C.A. The use and effects of incentive systems on learning and performance in educational games. Comput. Educ. 2021, 165, 104135. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Lesmes, C.Z.; Acosta-Solano, J.; Benavides, L.B.; Umaña Ibáñez, S.F. Design and Production of Educational Video Games for the Inclusion of Deaf Children. Procedia Comput. Sci. 2022, 198, 626–631. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Rahimi, S.; Shute, V.J.; Fulwider, C.; Bainbridge, K.; Kuba, R.; Yang, X.; Smith, G.; Baker, R.S.; D’Mello, S.K. Timing of learning supports in educational games can impact students’ outcomes. Comput. Educ. 2022, 190, 104600. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Ekin, C.C.; Elif Polat, E.; Sinan Hopcan, S. Drawing the big picture of games in education: A topic modeling-based review of past 55 years. Comput. Educ. 2023, 194, 104700. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Akl, E.A.; Kairouz, V.F.; Sackett, K.M.; Erdley, W.S.; Mustafa, R.A.; Fiander, M.; Gabriel, C.; Schünemann, H. Educational games for health professionals. Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. 2013, 28, CD006411. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Najdi, S.; Sheikh, R.E. Educational Games: Do They Make a Difference? Procedia—Soc. Behav. Sci. 2012, 47, 48–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Feldman, J.; Monteserin, A.; Amandi, A. Detecting students’ perception style by using games. Comput. Educ. 2014, 71, 14–22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Hu, H.; Sperling, R.A. Pre-service teachers’ perceptions of adopting digital games in education: A mixed methods investigation. Teach. Teach. Educ. 2022, 120, 103876. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Picka, K.; Dosedla, M.; Hrbáček, J.; Hodis, Z. Teachers’ experience with digital games in Czech primary schools. Entertain. Comput. 2022, 42, 100483. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Pozo, J.-I.; Cabellos, B.; Sánchez, D.L. Do teachers believe that video games can improve learning? Heliyon 2022, 8, e09798. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  40. Rosa-Castillo, A.; García-Pañella, O.; Maestre-Gonzalez, E.; Pulpón-Segura, A.; Roselló-Novella, A.; Solà-Pola, M. Gamification on Instagram: Nursing students’ degree of satisfaction with and perception of learning in an educational game. Nurse Educ. Today 2022, 18, 105533. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Huizenga, J.C.; ten Dam, G.T.M.; Voogt, J.M.; Admiraal, W.F. Teacher perceptions of the value of game-based learning in secondary education. Comput. Educ. 2017, 110, 105–115. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Jääskä, E.; Aaltonen, K. Teachers’ experiences of using game-based learning methods in project management higher education. Proj. Leadersh. Soc. 2022, 3, 100041. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Kurniasari, I.R.; Baedhowi, B.; Susilo, A.M. Development of Mobile Educational Game of Economics. Int. J. Multicult. Multirelig. Underst. 2018, 5, 355. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  44. Peña Miguel, N.; Corral Lage, J.; Mata Galindez, A. Assessment of the Development of Professional Skills in University Students: Sustainability and Serious Games. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1014. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  45. Cheung, S.Y.; Ng, K.Y. Application of the Educational Game to Enhance Student Learning. Front. Educ. 2021, 6, 623793. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  46. Liu, Y.-J.; Zhou, Y.-G.; Li, Q.-L.; Ye, X.-D. Impact Study of the Learning Effects and Motivation of Competitive Modes in Gamified Learning. Sustainability 2022, 14, 6626. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  47. Contreras-Espinosa, R.S.; Eguia-Gomez, J.L. Game Jams as Valuable Tools for the Development of 21st-Century Skills. Sustainability 2022, 14, 2246. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Beranič, T.; Heričko, M. The Impact of Serious Games in Economic and Business Education: A Case of ERP Business Simulation. Sustainability 2022, 14, 683. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Caballero-Hernández, J.A.; Palomo-Duarte, M.; Dodero, J.M. Skill assessment in learning experiences based on serious games: A Systematic Mapping Study. Comput. Educ. 2017, 113, 42–60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  50. Barr, M. Student attitudes to games-based skills development: Learning from video games in higher education. Comput. Hum. Behav. 2018, 80, 283–294. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  51. Martí-Parreño, J.; Galbis-Córdova, A.; Miquel-Romero, M.J. Students’ attitude towards the use of educational video games to develop competencies. Comput. Hum. Behav. 2018, 81, 366–377. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  52. McKim, A.J.; McKendree, R.B.; Pauley, C.M. Games in Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources Education. J. Res. Tech. Careers 2020, 4, 38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Adžić, S.; Al-Mansour, J.; Naqvi, H.; Stambolić, S. The impact of video games on Students’ educational outcomes. Entertain. Comput. 2021, 38, 100412. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  54. Reynaldo, C.; Christian, R.; Hosea, H.; Gunawan, A.A.S. Using Video Games to Improve Capabilities in Decision Making and Cognitive Skill: A Literature Review. Procedia Comput. Sci. 2021, 179, 211–221. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  55. Thangavelu, D.P.; Tan, A.J.Q.; Cant, R.; Chua, W.L.; Liaw, S.Y. Digital serious games in developing nursing clinical competence: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Nurse Educ. Today 2022, 113, 105357. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Xiong, Z.; Liu, Q.; Huang, X. The influence of digital educational games on preschool Children’s creative thinking. Comput. Educ. 2022, 189, 104578. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  57. Ibrahim, R.; Mohd Yusoff, R.C.; Mohamed Omar, H.; Jaafar, A. Students Perceptions of Using Educational Games to Learn Introductory Programming. Comput. Inf. Sci. 2011, 4, 205–216. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Yildiz, E.; Şimşek, Ü. Investigation of Fifth Grade Students’ Perceptions about the Educational Game Method. Cukurova Univ. Fac. Educ. J. 2021, 50, 1367–1396. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Pistono, A.; Santos, A.; Baptista, R. A qualitative analysis of frameworks for training through Serious Games. Procedia Comput. Sci. 2022, 204, 753–759. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  60. Selvi, M.; Çoşan, A.Ö. The effect of using educational games in teaching kingdoms of living things. Univers. J. Educ. Res. 2018, 6, 2019–2028. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  61. Alshammari, E. Implementing educational game in pharmacy. Int. J. Pharm. Qual. Assur. 2020, 11, 145–150. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  62. Adipat, S.; Laksana, K.; Busayanon, K.; Ausawasowan, A.; Adipat, B. Engaging Students in the Learning Process with Game-Based Learning: The Fundamental Concepts. Int. J. Technol. Educ. 2021, 4, 542–552. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  63. Udeozor, C.; Russo Abegão, F.; Glassey, J. An Evaluation of the Relationship between Perceptions and Performance of Students in a Serious Game. J. Educ. Comput. Res. 2022, 60, 322–351. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  64. Google Forms. Available online: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScEnypSTr9SmBpekliNnqX_PPyv-kTZKZC6N6FH3U4dL-h0CA/viewform (accessed on 30 September 2022).
  65. Jääskä, E.; Lehtinen, J.; Kujala, J.; Kauppila, O. Game-based learning and students’ motivation in project management education. Proj. Leadersh. Soc. 2022, 3, 100055. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  66. SAS® Studio 3.8: Task Reference Guide. Available online: http://documentation.sas.com/doc/en/sasstudiocdc/3.8/webeditorcdc/webeditorref/titlepage.htm (accessed on 16 November 2022).
  67. Ștefan, S.C.; Popa, I.; Mircioiu, C.-E. Lessons Learned from Online Teaching and Their Implications for Students’ Future Careers: Combined PLS-SEM and IPA Approach. Electronics 2023, 12, 2005. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Game typology. Source: own processing after Catalano and Albulescu, 2019 [7].
Figure 1. Game typology. Source: own processing after Catalano and Albulescu, 2019 [7].
Sustainability 15 07969 g001
Figure 2. Formative tasks of the educational process are achieved by integrating games into teaching activities.
Figure 2. Formative tasks of the educational process are achieved by integrating games into teaching activities.
Sustainability 15 07969 g002
Figure 3. Methodological steps.
Figure 3. Methodological steps.
Sustainability 15 07969 g003
Figure 4. Survey design (see Table A1).
Figure 4. Survey design (see Table A1).
Sustainability 15 07969 g004
Table 1. Teaching games integrated into the discipline of Project Management.
Table 1. Teaching games integrated into the discipline of Project Management.
GameObjective(s)Short Description/PresentationResourcesApproximate Time (Minutes)Skills
Paper plane Icebreaking
participants’ inter-knowledge
Each participant writes on a sheet of paper three things about him and builds an airplane. All planes are launched into the hall. Students take a plane at a time, read the ones written on paper, and try to identify the “owner” of the plane.Sheets of paper
writing instruments
10Active listening
Attention to details
Enthusiasm
Proactivity experimentation
PublicationStimulating and developing the capacity for teamworkParticipants are divided into teams. Teams have to create a publication (newspaper, magazine, etc.).
In the first stage, the participants will have to decide, in a group, what is the type of publication (general information, special information—magazine type, modern, etc.), the title of the publication, its sections—which each member will assume.
In the second stage, the groups will be dissolved, and each member will draw up an article for his/her rubric.
At the end, each member will present his “article” within the group, there will be discussions and amendments to each article, with the idea of creating a unity of them and the publication will be made up.
Sheets of paper
writing instruments
30–40Achieving goals
Attention to details
Awareness
Collaboration
Communication
Cooperation
Creativity
Creative thinking
Experimentation
Leadership
Open-mindedness
Organization
Proactivity
Responsibility
Results oriented
Task management
Time management
Work ethic
Marshmallow challengeThe attainment of an objective, setting out the ways in which it can be achieved
increasing group cohesion
following the requests
organizing and managing the resources
Increasing self-trust
Improving communication skills
Solution orientation
Increasing motivation to involve in project teams
Discovering new abilities
Increasing creation and innovative capacity
Awareness of the importance of team size
Participants are divided into teams of different sizes (2, 3, 4, 5, and 6). Teams must build the highest stable structure with the resources made available, observing a set of rules: the marshmallow must be found at the top of the construction, the structure must be self-sustaining, not glued to the table or hung, etc.
Parallel between the objectives set and the way in which they are intended to be achieved.
20 spaghetti
1 m thread
1 m tape
1 marshmallow
Timer
18Achieving goals
Adaptability
Attention to details
Awareness
Collaboration
Communication
Creativity
Experimentation
Innovation
Integrity
Organization
Perseverance problem solving
Responsibility
Results oriented
Time management
Work ethic
5S GameImproving productivity
The importance of standardization stimulating and developing the capacity for teamwork
Awareness of the importance of team size
Participants are divided into teams of different sizes (2, 3, 4, 5, and 6). Teams must find and score in ascending order the numbers from 1 to 49 on the boards made available under time pressure. The results obtained by the teams are recorded and then compared.Work drawings
Writing instruments
timer
15Attention to details
Awareness
Collaboration
Communication
competitiveness
Experimentation
Integrity
Organization
Perseverance
Responsibility
Time management
Work ethic
The ball of threadAwareness of the importance of each team member and identification of the qualities of the team members,
increasing motivation to involve in project teams
Participants are seated around a table. One of the participants has a ball of thread whose end sticks out in front of him on the table with scotch tape. It places another participant’s ball using the following formula: “I like X because...”
The one who received the ball, without breaking the thread, will stick with scotch the part of the thread in front of him and will place the ball further using the same formula until the ball with thread passed through all the participants and a “grid” was created.
At the end, some portions are detached to highlight how the links between the team members are affected if some of them leave the “game”
Thread
Tape
10–15Awareness
Active listening
collaboration
experimentation
Proactivity
The game of chairsAchieving an objective, setting activities to achieve the objective of increasing group cohesion
following the requests
organizing and managing the resources
Increasing self-trust
improving communication skills
solution orientation
Place the participants in a circle and have to go through a full tour, observing a set of rules.
Each participant has in front of him a chair supported on two legs, which he supports with his hand. Participants must pass in front of each chair, being allowed to support it in order to stay on two legs, but the seat must be supported by one hand.
If one of the seats falls on all four feet or on the back of the chair are the hands of two participants resume play. In this way, in order to achieve the objective, the participants had to collaborate and devise a “strategy”.
Number of seats = number of participants-Achieving goals
Attention to details
Collaboration
Communication
Coordination
Leadership
Optimism
Organization
Perseverance
Results oriented
Work ethic
ConstructionIncreasing group cohesion
Following the requests
organizing and managing the resources
Increasing self-trust
Improving communication skills
Solution orientation
Increasing motivation to involve in project teams
Participants are divided into teams. One member of each team is blindfolded. An image is projected with a construction made of Lego pieces. The construction will be carried out by the person blindfolded at the indications of colleagues.Lego pieces10Achieving goals
Attention to details
Collaboration
Communication
Experimentation
Integrity
Organization
Perseverance
Results oriented
Time management
Work ethic
Ball/
Pass the ball
Completing a session in a pleasant wayThe ball is passed from one participant to another; when catching the ball each participant had to summarize in one word the experience of the day, provided that the word is not repeated.Ball5Awareness
Active listening
Proactivity
Source: Own processing.
Table 2. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.1.
Table 2. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.1.
ItemMean PLMean ROT TestWilcoxon Rank—Sum Test
tpzp
Q.II.1.comm4.393.962.530.013 *2.200.027 *
Q.II.1.integr4.393.733.52<0.001 **2.940.003 **
Q.II.1.empath4.353.653.71<0.001 **2.870.004 **
Q.II.1.probl4.523.923.47<0.001 **2.750.005 **
Q.II.1.adapt4.273.882.460.015 *2.250.023 *
Q.II.1.work4.353.733.76<0.001 **3.270.001 **
Q.II.1.time4.453.783.76<0.001 **3.110.001 **
Q.II.1.resp4.193.861.970.0521.540.121
Q.II.1.activ4.333.882.440.016 *1.830.066
Q.II.1.awaren4.253.782.440.017 *1.410.156
Q.II.1.creativ4.234.090.880.3820.580.561
Significance: *—p < 0.05, **—p < 0.01. Source: Own statistical processing using SAS Studio.
Table 3. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.2.
Table 3. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.2.
ItemMean PLMean ROT TestWilcoxon Rank—Sum Test
tsig.zsig.
Q.II.2.comm4.373.922.580.011 *2.080.037 *
Q.II.2.empath4.353.673.70<0.001 **2.910.003 **
Q.II.2.awaren4.433.733.81<0.001 **3.090.001 **
Q.II.2.time4.353.733.86<0.001 **3.49<0.001 **
Q.II.2.work4.253.782.700.008 **2.290.021 *
Q.II.2.probl4.393.753.440.001 **2.540.012 *
Q.II.2.adapt4.394.012.150.034 *1.340.178
Q.II.2.resp4.133.841.640.1051.090.273
Q.II.2.integr4.193.822.050.044 *1.250.207
Q.II.2.activ4.313.822.820.006 **2.130.348
Significance: *—p < 0.05, **—p < 0.01. Source: Own statistical processing using SAS Studio.
Table 4. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.3.
Table 4. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.3.
ItemMean PLMean ROT testWilcoxon Rank—Sum Test
tpzp
Q.II.3.workprod4.523.923.93<0.001 **3.50<0.001 **
Q.II.3.team4.353.713.62<0.001 **3.090.001 **
Q.II.3.time4.473.824.00<0.001 **3.37<0.001 **
Q.II.3.request4.333.862.760.007 **2.180.028 *
Q.II.3.omr4.154.090.390.69690.040.960
Q.II.3.comm4.274.031.390.16920.570.567
Significance: *—p < 0.05, **—p < 0.01. Source: Own statistical processing using SAS Studio.
Table 5. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.4.
Table 5. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.4.
ItemMean PLMean ROT testWilcoxon Rank—Sum Test
tsig.zsig.
Q.II.4.workprod4.563.983.72<0.001 **3.140.001 **
Q.II.4.team4.413.962.680.008 **2.220.026 *
Q.II.4.time4.56863.734.62<0.001 **3.92<0.001 **
Q.II.4.request4.3334.012.040.044 *1.520.127
Q.II.4.omr4.23533.961.710.0901.130.254
Q.II.4.comm4.37254.051.710.0900.920.357
Significance: *—p < 0.05, **—p < 0.01. Source: Own statistical processing using SAS Studio.
Table 6. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.5.
Table 6. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.5.
ItemMean PLMean ROT testWilcoxon Rank—Sum Test
tsig.zsig.
Q.II.5.conflict4.493.694.47<0.001 **3.80<0.001 **
Q.II.5.negotiation4.373.444.85<0.001 **3.87<0.001 **
Q.II.5.public4.413.505.12<0.001 **4.36<0.001 **
Q.II.5.leader4.473.554.74<0.001 **3.82<0.001 **
Q.II.5.learning4.493.883.61<0.001 **2.950.003 **
Q.II.5.open4.353.922.610.010 *2.110.034 *
Q.II.5.risk4.503.804.01<0.001 **3.260.001 **
Q.II.5.experim4.393.882.920.004 **2.140.031 *
Q.II.5.creative4.543.883.76<0.001 **3.100.001 **
Q.II.5.optimism4.373.862.800.006 **2.300.021 *
Q.II.5.growth4.453.983.230.001 **2.690.007 **
Q.II.5.proactivity4.353.862.910.004 **2.380.017 *
Q.II.5.critical4.293.633.55<0.001 **2.880.003 **
Q.II.5.aip4.503.923.74<0.001 **3.270.001 **
Q.II.5.task4.333.982.400.018 *2.030.042 *
Q.II.5.emotional4.473.654.73<0.001 **3.95<0.001 **
Q.II.5.solution4.414.032.500.014 *2.000.044 *
Q.II.5.attention4.474.032.710.008 **2.110.034 *
Q.II.5.integrity4.503.884.07<0.001 **3.46<0.001 **
Q.II.5.perseverance4.413.942.980.003 **2.640.008 **
Q.II.5.achieving4.504.092.850.005 **2.520.011 *
Q.II.5.results4.504.013.42<0.001 **3.130.001 **
Q.II.5.honesty4.504.003.250.001 **2.550.010 *
Q.II.5.empathy4.543.943.400.001 **2.620.008 **
Q.II.5.collaboration4.434.51−0.640.5251.000.315
Q.II.5.orgniz4.333.902.400.018 *1.660.096
Q.II.5.enthusiasm4.333.922.330.021 *1.860.062
Q.II.5.cooperation4.394.071.830.0701.100.269
Q.II.5.awareness4.454.132.020.047 *1.310.187
Q.II.5.responsability4.454.132.120.037 *1.430.150
Q.II.5.active4.334.230.660.5080.180.852
Significance: *—p < 0.05, **—p < 0.01. Source: Own statistical processing using SAS Studio.
Table 7. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.6.
Table 7. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.6.
QuestionMean PLMean ROT TestWilcoxon Rank—Sum Test
tsig.zsig.
Q.II.6.motivation4.473.982.970.004 **2.240.024 *
Q.II.6.self-trust4.253.842.740.007 **2.220.026 *
Q.II.6.new4.504.003.250.001 **2.450.014 *
Q.II.6.creation4.393.942.770.006 **2.180.029 *
Q.II.6.comm4.394.052.010.0481.100.267
Q.II.6.solution4.354.071.750.0831.000.315
Significance: *—p < 0.05, **—p < 0.01. Source: Own statistical processing using SAS Studio.
Table 8. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.7.
Table 8. Average responses and results obtained by applying T test—two sample test and Wilcoxon rank—sum test to Q II.7.
ItemMean PLMean ROT TestWilcoxon Rank—Sum Test
tsig.zsig.
Q.II.7.gameintegr4.60784.6538−0.440.6580−0.72720.4671
Source: Own statistical processing using SAS Studio.
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Toader, C.-S.; Brad, I.; Rujescu, C.I.; Dumitrescu, C.-S.; Sîrbulescu, E.C.; Orboi, M.D.; Pașcalău, R.; Zajdel, M.; Michalcewicz-Kaniowska, M.; Gavrilă, C. Exploring Students’ Opinion towards Integration of Learning Games in Higher Education Subjects and Improved Soft Skills—A Comparative Study in Poland and Romania. Sustainability 2023, 15, 7969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15107969

AMA Style

Toader C-S, Brad I, Rujescu CI, Dumitrescu C-S, Sîrbulescu EC, Orboi MD, Pașcalău R, Zajdel M, Michalcewicz-Kaniowska M, Gavrilă C. Exploring Students’ Opinion towards Integration of Learning Games in Higher Education Subjects and Improved Soft Skills—A Comparative Study in Poland and Romania. Sustainability. 2023; 15(10):7969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15107969

Chicago/Turabian Style

Toader, Cosmina-Simona, Ioan Brad, Ciprian Ioan Rujescu, Carmen-Simona Dumitrescu, Elena Claudia Sîrbulescu, Manuela Dora Orboi, Raul Pașcalău, Małgorzata Zajdel, Małgorzata Michalcewicz-Kaniowska, and Codruța Gavrilă. 2023. "Exploring Students’ Opinion towards Integration of Learning Games in Higher Education Subjects and Improved Soft Skills—A Comparative Study in Poland and Romania" Sustainability 15, no. 10: 7969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15107969

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop